Automatic block signaling

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Searchlight type automatic block signal at Milepost 122.2 on the Reading Blue Mountain and Northern Railroad Lehigh Line (former Lehigh Valley Railroad) in Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania

Automatic block signaling (ABS) is a railroad communications system that consists of a series of signals that divide a railway line into a series of sections, or "blocks". The system controls the movement of trains between the blocks using automatic signals. ABS operation is designed to allow trains operating in the same direction to follow each other in a safe manner without risk of rear-end collision. The introduction of ABS reduced railways' costs and increased their capacity. Older manual block systems required human operators. The automatic operation comes from the system's ability to detect whether blocks are occupied or otherwise obstructed, and to convey that information to approaching trains. The system operates without any outside intervention, unlike more modern traffic control systems that require external control to establish a flow of traffic.

History[]

The earliest way of managing multiple trains on one track was by use of a timetable and passing sidings. One train waited upon another, according to the instructions in the timetable, but if a train was delayed for any reason, all other trains might be delayed, waiting for it to appear at the proper place where they could pass safely. Operation of trains by timetable alone was supplemented by telegraphed train orders beginning in 1854 on the Erie Railroad. A railroad company dispatcher would send train orders to stations manned by telegraphers, who wrote them down on standardized forms and handed them to train crews as they passed the station.[1]

A manual block system in the United States was implemented by the Pennsylvania Railroad about 1863, a couple of decades before other American railroads began using it. This system required a railroad employee stationed at each signal to set the signals according to instructions received by telegraph from dispatchers. English railroads also used a "controlled manual" block system, which was adapted for use in the U.S. by the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad in 1882.[2]

Automatic block signaling was invented in America, and first put to use by the Eastern Railroad of Massachusetts in 1871, and was soon adopted by other New England railroads. However, the cost of signals, equipment, and installation was very high in the 19th century, which deterred many railroads from installing it except on highly trafficked lines used by passenger trains. By 1906, the Interstate Commerce Commission reported that of the 194,726.6 miles of railroad in the United States,[3] there were 41,916.3 miles protected by the manual block system, and only 6,826.9 miles of automatic block, on either single or double track.[2] The rest of the nation's trackage was operated by timetable and train order.

However, as time went on, many railroads came to see automatic block signaling as cost effective, since it reduced the need for employees to manually operate each signal, reduced the repair costs and damage claims resulting from collisions, made possible a more efficient flow of trains, reduced the number of hours trains and crews sat idle, and decreased overall transit times from point to point.[2]

Basic operation[]

Most ABS systems use three- or four-block arrangements, where an obstruction in the first block will prompt a warning upon entering the second block, and allow full speed for trains entering the third. Where blocks are short or higher capacity is needed, four or more blocks are used; trains are then given multiple warnings of an impending obstruction. For basic block status, the red/yellow/green system of signalling is nearly universal, with red indicating an obstructed block, yellow indicating that an obstructed block is ahead, and green indicating that no obstruction is to be expected.

The most common way that ABS systems detect track occupancy (by a train or obstruction) is through the use of electrical track circuits. A low-voltage current is sent through the track between the signals and is detected to determine whether the circuit is closed, open, or shorted. A train's metal wheels and axles will pass current from one rail to the other, thereby shorting (shunting) the circuit. If the ABS system detects that the circuit is shorted between two signals, it understands that a train, or obstruction is occupying that block and will "drop" the signals (display a restricting or stop indication) on either side of that block to prevent another train from entering (if the block is governed by a positive stop). In the United Kingdom the system is referred to as track circuit block (TCB) to avoid confusion with the use, in that country, of the acronym AB for absolute block.

Single-direction ABS[]

A pair of ABS position light signals each governing one direction of travel on Norfolk Southern Railway's Enola Branch (former Pennsylvania Railroad)

The most common forms of ABS was implemented on double track rail lines in high density areas that has exceeded the capacity provided by either timetable and train order or other manual forms of signaling. ABS would be set up in such a way to cover train movements only in a single direction for each track. The movement of trains running in that direction would be governed by the automatic block signals which would supersede the normal superiority of trains, where such systems applied.[4] Movement of trains operating against the established flow of traffic would still require train orders or other special manual protections to prevent a collision. Therefore, under ABS operation trains moving in the wrong direction is an uncommon occurrence and may be not well supported by the track infrastructure.

Aside from increased capacity and safety compared to a manual block system, another advantage of the single direction ABS system is that it is relatively inexpensive to install and operate, each signaling point requiring only one relay for its own track circuit and one additional relay for each block in its control length. Where interlockings are installed, entrance from the reverse direction may be fitted with less expensive dwarf or shunt signals and any non-interlocked points may be fitted in a trailing configuration, which require less safety equipment. Traditional ABS also has no single point of failure and no requirement to transmit state information to a central location and as long as its own track circuit is unoccupied and the inputs from the block or two down the line report the same, an ABS signal will display a clear indication.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Gwyer, William L. (2006-05-01). "Train Orders". Trains. Retrieved December 6, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c Report of the Interstate Commerce Commission on Block-Signal Systems and Appliances for the Automatic Control of Railroad Trains. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1907. pp. 6–9. Retrieved 2013-12-01.
  3. ^ Phillips, J. (1997). "The USRA era, 1900-1916". PW2.Netcom.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2013-11-30.
  4. ^ "Rules for Conducting Transportation". Broadway.Pennsyrr.com. Pennsylvania Railroad. 1964. Archived from the original on 2013-02-01. Retrieved 2013-12-06.

Further reading[]


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